The evening world. Newspaper, March 14, 1914, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE REV. DR. PRICE | “Every Women Is Bornin Searcit DENIES CHARGES ‘ta Met aw . aoe w RPL LLLP ar nr re ee ‘Shop Girl Has Better Chance Than Rich Girl’’ ‘ THE EVENING WOCLD, SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1914. of a Husband; THREATEN 10 KILL MAN WHOM WOMAN & woman's vengeance,” sald Keating in telling of the attack. “I did not know the woman. You sev, I had a valuable bulldog. She had one also, and sent it to a relative in the house | at No, 107 West One Hundred and | Fourth street, where I live. Her dog | was found dead in the street, and she, accused me of killing the animal. GANG OF RO TIE UP FOUR MEN, TRON TG > Vz ACCUSED OF STEALING AND KILLING 00G. “t was arrested, but the police would not hold me, as there wae no —— evidence to show I was responsible Ce aceett t,tme aor,t weaer-| Smash Safe of Chicago Firm, Throw Away $40,000. in said she would be revenged for the death of the dog.” | A few days ago Arthur Woods, sec- Money Ese. retary to Mayor Mitchel, recetved an} Heth Orders and sa {anonymous letter which said tho tack on Keating had been prompted | by @ woman who had accused him of having kicked the dog from the root of the apartment house, Keating was taken to the West One Hundredth street station by Police- man Studewell on Jan. 23 last on the complaint of Mra, Marie Brown, who charged him with having stolen her | dog. The complaint was withdrawn. Police record shows that the body of the dog was taken care of by the Stephen Merritt Burial Company r it was found in the atreet. it it seems that later the Frank E. Campbell Lge akioghir Company took charge of the body of Brownle at the WOMEN ARR BORN “IW SEARCH OF A HUSBAND" Won't Tell the Nature of Com- Hearing of ‘Men Delayed, De- plaint, but Hints It Is Pure- tectives Paomise Capture of ‘Va SwOe.GieL ONLY As Her and “‘Go-Between.” WO MARRY A MAN” . D6G. . WAS TO AVE \ ly Malicious. CHURCH IS WITH HIM. CHICAGO, March 14.—Five armed robbers broke into the mall order branch of the Hartman Furniture Company, at No. 3913 Wentworth ave- nue, early to-day, blew open the of- fice safe, threw aside valuable securt- tles, discarded $40,000 in money or- ders and escaped with $16,000 cash, the weekly payroll of the company. Leaving « guard outside, the four attacked, bound and gagged a wetch- man in the basement. A second and third employee of the furniture com- pany were surprised and bound and Says He Has Assurance oi That—Nothing Before the ' Superintendent. Police Anxious to Question Mrs. Dunn, Known to Stage as Zaza Belasco. = | Influences tmve been et in motion in the undorworld to protect the } Young woman sald to have offered | ~ The Rev. Dr. Jacob E. Price, pastor ’* @f the Washington Heights Methodist Mpiecopal Church, One Hundred and Fitty-third street and Amaterdam Nes. she, Wah auaiied Uy co fie Wisltred V. Daas. | guawed, The robtere thew Mae SF venue, vigorously asserted his inno- | | fvugs on the evening of Tih 6 por W. V. Duane Aun ire the safe door with nitro-glycerine. ence to-day of the charges made | |alashod with a knife on the beat Shere | Failure of the watchmen to make agsinst him by two wotnen, but re- ’ | fad) and throat, and to save from fused to speak of the exact nature ik j further prosecution Stanley Horman if , . < 3 ' and larry Hreseler, the gangsters “T have not seen the stories printed, | he who ing has identified as two bag 1 het ho as Brownle, a their hourly report on the burglar at Monday Duna left Blue | ger: ‘ easy Point after an argument. with the |r vce int igh gece — station master growing out of her | send one of its special watchmen to the building. order to have her trunks sent to “Mrs, Dunn, Pennsylvania Station,| The outside xuard covered him with to-day*and their examination again aad I don't want to see them,” he! " | of the threa who attacked him.) New York.” qald at Lodhasdgae td No, 1968 Am-} Keating entered the West Sido a revolver and escorted him within oterdam nue, “but I will make this Court\where the men were arraigned eyecare the building, where he was bound @tatement: Some time ago, before \ BISHOP SCARBOROUGH and gagged and left with the three , thip thing was given publicity, 1 re- Hartman watchmen, quested my district superintendent to; make a full investigation of the | charges.” He referred ‘The Evening World re- | Porter to the Rey. Dr. Allan McRossie | of No, 1% Claremont avenue, Superin- \««Mfen, Are More Moral About Marriage Than Wom- the New York Conforence which is! em,” Says Corra Harris; ‘a Man Demands Things of the Woman He Asks to Be His Wife Which presided over by Bishoy Luther 1. | ‘Wilson. = | | She Doesn't Demand of Him.” ® pontpowed, under the escort of De-| Z a tectiverwQuinn and Donnelly. | vow son | IS DEAD IN TRENTON | wuo cost Tow oF ye Ge oF ‘reasure An OLD MAD, accosted tam the street by a stran; rt wer, of Protes' Episcopal Chure! 7 saga ; Head (eta tant Episcop 1 Church vasa in BRK: “Pull off.on this thing. Pull oft in New Jersey Was Ill A crowd of amall boys, You'll got Seorse if you don't.” Only Short Time. busily ongag@d carrying off @ ton of TRENTON, N. J. March 14-—The Then the man faded away tn the coal that lay unclaimed on the sidewalk crowd. before No, 19 Lexington avenue were KEATING SAYS HE FEARS FOR | Right Rev. John Scarborouxh, D. D., HIS LIFE. Protestant Kplscopal Hishop of New chased away last night by Patrotman Glinaman of the East Eighty-cighth “Tl admit I'm scared. They nearly | Jersey, died at his home here to-day street station, who then made unsuo- gotimo the first time and I'm aatistied| efter 4 short illness, He wan in his eh ce in the neighborhood to theytve got the nerve to try awaln, 1] ahty-third ye ‘No ome knew where the coal. came Se Jehink Ut can take care of myself, but{ Bishop Scarborough was born in 4 ALLEGED PICKPOCKETS It's a sary sttuntion.” Ireland in 1881 and wan In the fortl- /> Dr. McRossie was loath to discuss the matter. Finally he expresso! a wish to make a statement this after- | . moon, but in the mean time tovk vc- ‘S By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. casion to deny that Dr. Prive had re- | ry woman is born in search of a husband. quested Kim to make an Investiga-| “The shopgirl has a better chance of marrying than the rich girl, The tlon, He appoared much disturbed | croice of the foriner ig Hmited to a man, dut the latter must wed a fortune. when he was told of the accused pas- | @ social position, a dozen automobiles, a im yacht tor's words, | Ma wromnes sill tt She CAN GOT ANYTHING SNE WANT (F Sug _CAN ONLY WeeP OUT OF A PiGnt Keating carries a revolver, permis-| th year of hin episcopate, He was sion ‘to Go #o having been given to him by Magistrate Corrigan. Ho sat| tended country school in Queens- THINKS IT DUE TO HIS ACTIV-| ITY. | and a brownstone fi nt. “The pew woman, like any other, necds @ husband: ARE TAKEN IN CROWD in court while Horman and Bressler | bury. N. Y., and was graduated later arratmned and watched then:| from = Triuity College nt Hartford, Their counsel, Nathan Lieber- | Conn. He completed his schooling at the General Theological Seminary, this city. He hecama a deacon in 1867 and tater wan minister in churches at Troy and Poughkeepsie and in Pittsburgh. In 1876 Dr. Scarborough was con- mpcrated tshop of the New Jersey diocese of the Protestant Episcopal Church with his see at Trenton, In his nearly: forty years of wervice he made a etriking record. More than two yearn ago ho told a congregation that he hnd given holy communion to more than 36,000 persons. His views on divorce, to which he was strongly opposed, were always in- |~ teresting and his utterances on the subject full of vigor. The last three years of Bishop Mcarborough’s life were active. Three yeal . when there was a cele- bration of him eightieth birth versury in Trenton, he said he an young an ever, He wan busy at active with the affairs of the bishop- rie until his last illness. ——.——— OR. J.D. BRYANT ILL. | closely. man, asked ‘Magistrate Simms for an adjournment till Manday afiernovun. ‘The detectives asked that they be put among the audier @ that a negro who had witnessed the attack on Keat- Police Surround Throng at ioe sient have a chance to tdentity Steamship Office While |WOMAN CANNOT BE {FOUND BY Y Mr. Lieberman protested and asked Detectives Make Arrests. that the Magistrate order that no attempt be reade to identify them on their way to the cell. This Magis- trate Simms refused to do, but the negro did not recognize either of them. No trace has ,been found of the woman in the case nor of chaut- four who is said to have acted as her go-betweon in the negotiations with members of the “Dopey Benny” but there ia a type of new woman whom no husband needs, “If a woman ta left uninfluenced ehe will marry for Jove, but men are more moral about marriage than women, “The woman who proposes to a@ decent man simply Cry a succeeds in shocking him." wit say that nothing whatever Has| From the mint of the cleverest phrase coiner in America come these been submited to me concerning the ¢Pigrams. In fact, I know of no modern novelist anywhere with a wit as per- eharges against Dr. Price, either by | pistemt and as provocative as that of Mra. Corra Harris. It attracted her the women who I am told accuse him | first readers when “A Circuit Rider's Wife” appeared in the market, for at or by Dr. Price himself. I believe| that time Mrs. Harris was the quite unheralded wife of a Southern Metho- thi ‘8 eometbing that should not be gist minister. Now in hor latest novel, “In Search of @ Husband,” her discussed in the newspapers.” ‘admirers will find the usual smile on every page, the sophisticated, keen- Dr. Price said he preferred that his eyed, yet not unkindly smile of a forty-five-vear-old mind. And if some of ee. ect bpeinnud Brow | the novelist’s adroit axioms are more adroit than they are axiomatic, we wey, Wan bimself. “1 don’t think Dr. Price meant to} @ay just that,” Dr. McRossie sald. | “I do not wish to be drawn into a controversy, and it would be neces- @ary to go into a full explanation of the methods of our church in a nit. | uation of this kind before the. aver- | age layman could understand it. 1) eyes, And when at last she capitu- lates she never comes to him, She merely perches on a tree and doean't| In the crowd of more than 200 per- fly away when he files toward her.|#ons gathered this morning outside That's how it should be with a young | the offices of the French and Italian Man and woman.” steamship companies at No, 17 State “Then you don't agree with the|etreet to get passes to meet immi- have nevertheless to pay homage to an incomparable craftsman in Words. | modern women writers who urge that | grants at Ellis Island, Detectives he| WOMAN A PROMOTER OF HER- |when she lifts the edge of her small) woman should drop all evastons and | Mugge, Gaynor and Toner noticed SELF LIKE BECKY SHARP. lace skirt between her thumb at |e propore to the man of her | several mem they belleed wero pick- : “In asserting my innocence,” \ ‘went on, “I can only say that I cdn- mot understand the charges these ‘women have brought. I cannot ex- plain who they are or what the wharges are, but I believe that people Rave been working for a long time, against me and for a motive I can) Her newest tale is the confession of |finger. Woman has the cousage of} choice?” pockets, Deciding that the crowd @ young woman who is a promoter—|provocation, man the courage of a8-| “you might as well tell a haw-|was too large to enter alone, they of herself. Like her English proto-|greasion.” thorn to be an oak or a rose to be ®| called the reserves from the Church type, Becky Sharp, she bas no mother,| “You wrote in ‘The Recording | rook,” Mrs, Harris declared scorn-| street station and whon they had ‘and even as Becky she realizes that| Angel’ of the longing of maidens for leyny, “4 woman courted in the old-| quietly surrounded the crowd the de- herself must hunt for a rich@hus- which changes later to an old |¢ashioned way isn't boing hypocritical | tectives plunged into it. wang. v FOR JOB, 80 ARE Members of the band, according to the police, are hofping in the search for the woman and the alleged go-be- . {band as @ means to iusury, the end fear of @ man hidden in the|or deceitful, but natural. If she at- i e nothing unless {t is personal Bit: | 1 craves Ain only ‘lien one man t rckiled, abd, you eal tea coerce tea eneeet wan acme ene there was intense excite- | ween becatise they say only $200 was | tx. a a result of my activity in on openly tenders the luxury but|that men should be prosecuted for lgmoyed to provens (78 deve ment, ‘Theewuspected men sought to| paid when Keating wasn't klled but BORGFELDT & CO. 1 Evo lbedinetilliheg (rot the husband does she see herself| allowing any good woman to remain|' 1 [facane, Mt te sald, by frightening the) only slashed with a uunife, ab O88) ye Joseph Decatur Bryant, phystcian pat san Beare Nu) pocnt thay during the ie r the “virgin adventuress” that| unwed until this romantic neuras- DRY Way: men are: mere mere crowd into a riot and the throng,| tundred and Fourth strwet and Cen-| |i sntimate friend of the late Pred Gaynor administration I hed many) iy.) tevin cota tn, May it not be true| @bout marriage than women. A | composed largely of foreigners, was | irai Park West on tlt eveniB® Of | dent Grover (ev was taken tilts with Mayor Gaynor. I took a, man demands things of the |casily terrified. Men rushed this way | rep, 25, \ | to Bt. Vincent's Hospital Inst Wednea- that the modern girl sometimes doesn’t marry for love because the modern man fails as a lover?” “Man'was a good lover until woman slapped bis face ‘and ked off and left him atanding there,” she fetorted. end “What I wanted to show," Mrs. “live palieyoiop aula causes | sarris told me earnestly, “is the fam@ created antagonism. falsity of the training of many mod- @ECEIVES ASSURANCES FROM), FRIENDS. f | “The woman of to-day often "One of the things that compensate | santana tor any atte and that, only to come up against a uniformed man who barred their way. Men yelled and woman became hys- terical in the turmoll, but through ‘The case is one of the strang»et ever | brought to the attention ‘of the police from the fact that a wonsan Is said to be the chief conspirator. Mr. Rubin to-Gay refused to tell her name. day following an attack of dinbetes, wan reported resting comfortably to- day. Dr. Bryant celebrated hie sixty-ninth fenniversary ‘Thursday. Through his friendship with President Clevela: womun he aeke to be his wife which she deeen't demand of him. I think a single standard of mer- ality is ao desirable ideal. But nd poses. ne your f | fw the, fact that a few moments | 4 fe in |!t all the detectives kept their eyes that the poBce are anx- acl 4 it And yet love is ‘A man will give a woman al- when | bought my farm It ls known that pol through his books on medicine th Jour own howtos Bat J Welalpe liad teed telephoned a caly jst : moct caything inthe world une | Georgia | didn't say, ‘It must be [om the men they wanted. and when | ioug to question Mrs. Winifred Duan byurgery ee ere ciseete te ante money, sveuneno Bei ES bipedal a a ne | piage. It ie the creator. Wh Meas ne proweiiee hime but ene | @ perfect farm, house and barn |the frightened throne Anally burt | regarding one angle of the Keatlog jfession, Dr. Hryant gather « national i. Dep. tin. and ber husband w it | you see life you may know mustn't provoke him! They say |° all complete and not @ weed cn ington street they had arreated aix | Mrs, Dunn te well known on | reputation. it’ 1 took what | thought wae a geod bargain. And th the way with a woman when she leves and marries.” Which ts perhaps one reason why the single standard ‘of morality re- le ideal and, for all of becoming Broadway, where she appeared in _—_———— spectacular productions, Her stage) TEN KILLED IN TRAIN CRASH, name is Zaza Helasco. She is about thirty-two years-old, and her hair 1») gy¢ of Titian tipt. we will never get the suffrage by asking for it prettily and sweet- ly. | say we will never get it any other way. There ought to be a commandment thi a woman should be loyat-to all women and charming to all men, | have no use for the shrew-citizen or for o . anything more tangible. the. pntentig) ste: sihipen: @ | “Should a woman atay at home Men huve made laws that are un- | ev that love has gone befere. Every very tree, every flower that the issue of love. It is men. Four of them, the detectives aad, were old-timers who were well known to them One of them wan Abie Tuck also known as Glick, who gave his address as No. 128 Allen street, The detectives say he has been arreatell fifteen times and once served five years in Quebec Prison. Louis Beransky of No. 82 Forsyth toy . Tam happy in the con- | hace of my friends and congrega- | tion.” le Ig the charges against Dr. Price come to trial, it is sald this can come ether of everything one: only when the conferegce meets in| money. jacrilege consists “in A April, when it would be necessary for| being henerable and faithful in @ committee appointed hy the conter-| 'eving . ence to recommend such action. “L have been called cynical,” she Anthony Comstock, ‘to whom the added, protestingly. ‘But I am not. y laughed at marriage or | hers Hurt When New fouth Wales Fiyer Is Wreked. Zaza Belasco was a chorus girl in f the old Columbia Theatre, Browhirts Pia aaah pic) Tiles Mare ten years ago. Afterward was a thers Injured, t Sinan Show pitt with one of Edward | ously, 1s ‘Sinica, “tordaw batenen’s y eo train and a relght loco Rice's productions. There is no evi-|!nail, tran tne A A SlEn jocemetive ; jou. Ro-day: |f have nev and wait to be married,” 1 questioned, . pod aged first eneens <0) retkay: at two you persons just beginning just to women, but I don't believe | 9, may she do some work?’ street has been arrested twenty |dence that she is the woman stones near Moss Vale. ree ‘accident occurred Rae CRATERS WEDS OL 00 POTIOUR A DS vach other, And, 1 i ir tried | or may ‘ timgs, say the detectives, and has|to have -hired the gangsters. Sve fone 08 ag cused o turn toward each other, And, they did it on purpose, If a man trie i Mrs. Harris is satisfyingly Mo.) Among the fifteen were a man R ture that the person accused whould | iy 4 lore J nerved aix term® in the penitentiary.|Dunn was a guest at the Hotel Mc- | and his two daughters who w i either be punished or vindicated, 1 tough | am a ss fragist, | have not} to make a pair of pants alone he |, gern in her point of view. a | Rome the y of the ta Pres) PREDISRIG GP VERGIRE SURES) 04 sth any age body, | P 54 ‘ Samuel Goldstein of No. 111 Kaat] Alpin on Thursday, but it was said | hom body , who reported then to Bishop Wilon ax the | lied myself with any suffrage body, | couldn't male them fit properly. 80/14 peagon FOR A GIRL TO SIT S carky vonerdad, had died previously in @ hospital. A because t do not, I cannot, approve of| his laws don’t fit unless a woman | Third street has a record, according | there to-day Ie iy : f the same family was severely AT HOME. “This wohle thing is the result of “There is no more reason why @ girl should sit around at home than why a boy should sit around at to the detectives, of fifteen arrests, but has escaped with a few terma in the workhouse and some small fines. Jacob Niedish of No, 366 South jority. 1 do net wish to he | Be ae ce von riee the development of a spirit of antag-/ helps him with them, though he has | ‘At. & hearing before Bishop Wilson onlsm between men ‘and women.” —_ | always tried to protect ua. If women r | Mrs. Harris has ull those qualities} had had the entire making of the ‘wursday mer Avsistant Vistrict- | on arash Mose Coane ia the of charm which one instinctively a8-| law since the beginning of the world, . | 7 i ‘ J declared. “Every girl interests , Price nd of the *% jates with Southern women, Her) men would be on al} fours and far she Church ct oe ine Washington |!0Ws warinly toned voice broadens| worse off than we are now,” con-|should be taught to do something, nee ee, BOT Lad sevoped Mr, Mose eaid to. |€VrY vpwel and eliminates every | cludeil Mrs Harria, with her soft,{and she should be taught the worth NALS rel Gotambus 3406" Heights Church. | $10, the detectives say. They admit | of a dollar, Despite the I. W. W. She stands and sity and moves | throaty chuckle. day: ¢ “It seems to me a very dreadful © SALLOW SKIN, ROP ARS {gen tee Gt Mentante, ‘Dizainess and about with a reposeful grace which | began to fear that this interview, | frame for the braids that are Still! (je average girl ts like your heroine, heavy and still yellow despite thelr| gor four-fifths of her etory—out for ownor's self-admitted forty-Ave years. | at) sho can get?" new woman needs a busband?" I sug-| marry for love, gested. ‘only when she is taught false atand- “@he needs one, although she isn't | ards and, false values by our com- She acts otherwise | there is a lot, a tremendous lot, to And I think the thing. The working girl only needs to find'a MAN for a husband, “In what I call the right marriage each person looks for the good in the |marriases of thie sort being made every day,” concluded Mre, Harris | | KOENIGSBEPS, Germany, March 14, —Another fatal accident to a German with another of her quiet contralto) oon, aviator oomrred here to-<tay when - | that they have no record of the other two men arreated. GERMAN AVIATOR KILLED. always needed by, one,” Mrs. Harrls| pticated civilization, Did you ever |igi “"m ly optimistic, you L The aah Center Dancin (rere averred. “A woman in born In search ot | watch a bird courtship? The male cg ay a eens, Toll ventas tee oy raat ry Tien 10 PRIRTE RO0US FOR RARQUETS Ane PARTIES ss bird sthgs and struts and swears that| Besbape she wil! also allow me to] try Regiment was DANCING AE IES% riot vs) Se san ih earthing 8 cet Phe that gho:'le- the meat vefresh- Sereeset eres ta ING | RLRNAP ERE” i A. sa co aa as 3 Se ‘ eli ie ina we ak Oe lalsle Se eave BUSTANOBY “BUSTANOBY’S GOTH S' In Addition to the 39th St, Estab, Andre and Jecquee Bustanoby have PURCHASED THE “LOUIS MARTIN" RESTAURANT —_ Dinner °,'3,° $1.50 Luncheon, 50c Suppers .4,'" ‘Miso Prasess Pritehard. latest sect- iad snaracter 72Kes the ave ‘aw York woman! je the old man in the fable, would do 4n the world. : - n ae on eee Up haa aes wae ike @ aufferer from #t. VILA ond by pleasing nobodyenelther auf- |shop girls and the stenographers ah See rate Miron 3 alee | rt Siwed by ‘a vet of adventitious per- davce. Her hands are whi 1 beau-| frayista nor antis, So [ tried to tack | have better chances of merrying than} (ot 97 coo ny such after the di f a ‘#0 to speuk, on the outs tifully and she has w fush-' hack to the leas controversial quea-|the daughters of the rich. The lat-|N0i Oat ey 9 des RESTAURANTS IF YOU POSSESS a few dollars you éan of congregation: fon of tviating a black silk scart! tion of matrimony. ter have to wed money and houses | tectives Nan aii tra buy a house or farm on eny around her shoulders-—a most effective| “Do you belleve,” I asked, “that and automobiles and all that sort of NO Ww O PEN payment plan. i IP YOU POSSESS 4 hquse or fare J save rent and we a THE NEW WOMAN NEEDE Aq GIRL WILL WED FOR LOVE IF noe | other and tries to make it better, in ADWA! ND fot STREET, sagt IF YOU POSSESS 3 of the ' Sick H ea dache. : HUSBAND. ‘ ber ALONE. vm wy (ateed of Hooking for the bad and try- | Am AT BROADWAY AN Thin A} day World Was "piratory “You think, en, (hal even the “if aa js left alone e wi " . x e ou thin! jon, What ever a oi a ing to make It worse. And there are gh A bes parts of New York and *: on the pay-4s-you-please b

Other pages from this issue: